DocketNumber: No. SPNO 950617515
Judges: TIERNEY, J.
Filed Date: 7/31/1995
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
This is a residential summary process action involving a month-to-month tenancy. The Motion to Dismiss claims that double notices to quit deprive the court of subject matter jurisdiction. The first notice to quit was based on an April 1, 1995 non payment. The second notice to quit was also based on an April 1, 1995 non payment.
FACTS
The parties entered into an oral month to month tenancy for residential premises in Stamford. Rent was due on the first day of each calendar month. The rent due April 1, 1995 was alleged not to have been paid. On April 12, 1995 the plaintiff served a notice to quit on both defendants for "non payment of rent" requiring the defendants to vacate on or before April 18, 1995. The defendants failed to vacate. A summary process action was commenced entitled Gerald Lombardi v. Sandra Dunningand John Doe. This lawsuit was withdrawn by the plaintiff on May 3, 1995.
The plaintiff did not serve any notice to the defendants reinstating the tenancy or voiding the legal effect of the April 12, 1995 notice to quit. The April 12, 1995 notice to quit was timely served and in all aspects complied with statutory requirements. Connecticut General Statutes §
On May 5, 1995 the plaintiff served a new notice to quit on both defendants. The second notice to quit stated as reasons "non payment of rent for the month of April 1995" and "lapse of time" as to both defendants and "no right or privilege to occupy the premises" as to the defendant, John Doe. The second notice to quit required the defendants to vacate the premises on or before May 15, 1995. This summary process lawsuit followed. The plaintiff filed a Motion to Dismiss alleging that "the second notice to quit is a nullity and cannot serve as the jurisdictional basis of this action."
Memoranda of law were filed by both parties and at oral argument the court took judicial notice of the prior summary process file.
DISCUSSION OF LAW
A proper notice to quit is a condition precedent to a valid summary process action. Lampasona v. Jacobs,
The defendant is claiming that the first notice to quit is an unequivocal act terminating the month-to-month tenancy at will effective April 12, 1995 and creating a tenancy at sufferance. The defendant further claims that the second notice to quit served on May 5, 1995 is a nullity and a summary process lawsuit cannot be based on nonpayment of use and occupancy. After April 12, 1995 no rent was due, only use and occupancy. The defendant argues that the second notice to quit deprives the court of subject matter jurisdiction. Cohen v. Thorpe, supra 121. The court agrees with the argument so far as it goes.
The plaintiff argues that Cohen v. Thorpe, is based on an incorrect legal premise. The plaintiff claims that the first notice to quit is void since the underlying lawsuit was withdrawn, citing Bridgeport v.Barbour-Daniel Electronics, Inc.,
The court has found four dual notice to quit cases reported in Connecticut. Cianciolo v. Plano, 1 Conn. Cir.Ct. 206, 207 (1962) (separate notices to quit addressed to two different tenants served on those two different tenants held valid); Bridgeport v. Barbour-Daniel Electronics,Inc., supra 574 (invalid first notice to quit for failure to comply with same-month service requirement of Connecticut General Statutes §
In the usual dual notice to quit case, the first notice to quit is invalid for some technical statutory violation, i.e. failure to give five clear days. Without withdrawing the first notice to quit or formally reinstating the tenancy, the landlord serves a second notice to quit. The defendant, tenant, then argues that the first notice to quit, although statutorily defective, was valid under common law standards to act as an unequivocal termination of the lease. Tenant's status as a month to month tenant under a tenancy at will has been terminated and the unequivocal first notice to quit has created a tenancy at sufferance. Mayron's Bake Shops Inc. v. Arrow Stores, Inc.
CONCLUSION
Facts of this case are unusual. The second notice to quit claims the same reason as the first notice to quit, nonpayment of rent for April 1, 1995. The first notice to quit was served after the nine-day statutory grace period. Connecticut General Statutes §
Here the second notice to quit although valid under statutory grounds and common law grounds, had no legal effect. The parties relationship as of May 4, 1995 was tenancy at sufferance since the first notice to quit on April 12, 1995 unequivocally terminated the month-to-month tenancy at will. There is no statute nor any reported case stating that a notice to quit or an unequivocal act can terminate a tenancy at sufferance. This court concludes that the second notice to quit is a nullity.
The court has before it a valid notice to quit; the first notice to quit served on April 12, 1995, upon which to base a summary process action.
The plaintiff has filed a motion for permission to amend his complaint seeking to plead the April 12, 1995 notice to quit. This motion was on file at the time of arguing this motion to dismiss. The court must construe the pleadings in a motion to dismiss most favorably to the plaintiff and will make all valid presumptions to confer jurisdiction upon the court. Duguay v. Hopkins,
The Motion to Dismiss is denied.
Jo-Mark Sand & Gravel Co. v. Pantanella ( 1953 )
Hartford Wheel Club v. Travelers Insurance ( 1905 )
O'Keefe v. Atlantic Refining Co. ( 1946 )
Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Costle ( 1980 )
Lonergan v. Connecticut Food Store, Inc. ( 1975 )